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NANOWIRES

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Fabricate, produce and study 0D, 1D and 2D confined structures ... The capability to fabricate nanowires of specific parameters (composition, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: NANOWIRES


1
NANOWIRES
  • Ongi Englander
  • Advisor Prof. Lin
  • Feb 11, 2002

2
Outline
  • Background
  • Thermoelectric materials, properties nanowires
  • Quantum confinement
  • Magnetic nanowires
  • Silicon nanowires
  • Nanowire fabrication
  • Template assistance
  • Electrochemical deposition
  • CVD
  • Our current goals

3
Why nanowires? Thermoelectric nanowires?
  • Thermoelectric compounds
  • Bismuth telluride (Bi2Te3) - refrigeration
  • Bismuth antimony (BiSb)
  • Lead telluride (PbTe)
  • Silicon germanium (Si1-xGex) power generation
  • These materials are used for smaller cooling
    applications
  • Not highly efficient
  • Environmentally friendly
  • Very reliable

(http//www.peltier-info.com/photos.html)
4
Thermoelectric properties
  • Measured by a materials dimensionless figure of
    merit ZT(a2s/l)T
  • a - Seebeck coeff,
  • s -electrical conductivity,
  • l- total thermal conductivity (electronic and
    lattice))
  • Best thermoelectric materials ZT 1 (upper
    limit for many years) for simple/bulk materials
  • a ? s ?
  • s ? l ?

5
Motivation I Increase ZT
  • Desire to increase ZT for improved device
    capability and efficiency
  • Need to manipulate material properties
    difficult do to on the macro scale
  • Significantly easier to do on smaller scales
    where structures quantum confined
  • Fabricate, produce and study 0D, 1D and 2D
    confined structures
  • Discover and characterize many unique properties
    and behaviors with possible wide range
    applicability

6
Motivation II Quantum confinement
  • Trap particles and restrict their motion
  • Quantum confinement produces new material
    behavior/phenomena
  • Engineer confinement- control for specific
    applications
  • Structures
  • Quantum dots (0-D) only confined states, and
    no freely moving ones
  • Nanowires (1-D) particles travel only along the
    wire
  • Quantum wells (2-D) confines particles within a
    thin layer

(Scientific American)
7
Why nanowires?
They represent the smallest dimension for
efficient transport of electrons and excitons,
and thus will be used as interconnects and
critical devices in nanoelectronics and
nano-optoelectronics. (CM Lieber, Harvard)
  • General attributes desired properties
  • Diameter 10s of nanometers
  • Single crystal formation -- common
    crystallographic orientation along the nanowire
    axis
  • Minimal defects within wire
  • Minimal irregularities within nanowire arrays

8
Magnetic nanowires
  • Important for storage device applications
  • Cobalt, gold, copper and cobalt-copper nanowire
    arrays have been fabricated
  • Electrochemical deposition is prevalent
    fabrication technique
  • lt20 nm diameter nanowire arrays have been
    fabricated

Cobalt nanowires on Si substrate
(UMass Amherst, 2000)
9
Silicon nanowires
  • Grown with the aid of a nucleating metal (gold,
    zinc, iron) and silane (SiH4) as the silicon
    source
  • In many cases Vapor-Liquid-Solid (VLS) is the
    assumed growth mechanism
  • Whisker/crystal growth phenomenon
  • Catalyst is found at tip of nanowire
  • CVD of silane (thermal decomposition of silane)
  • Various methods of integrating catalyst
  • Electron-beam evaporation of Au islands onto SiO2
    coated Si substrate
  • Zn deposited onto an electrochemically etched
    porous Si substrate
  • Porous Fe/SiO2 gel used as substrate
  • Successfully grow 20 nm 30 nm diameter wire
    arrays

10
Nanowire fabrication
  • Challenging!
  • Template assistance
  • Electrochemical deposition
  • Ensures fabrication of electrically continuous
    wires since only takes place on conductive
    surfaces
  • Applicable to a wide range of materials
  • High pressure injection
  • Limited to elements and heterogeneously-melting
    compounds with low melting points
  • Does not ensure continuous wires
  • Does not work well for diameters lt 30-40 nm
  • CVD
  • Laser assisted techniques

11
Template assisted nanowire growth
  • Create a template for nanowires to grow within
  • Based on aluminums unique property of self
    organized pore arrays as a result of anodization
    to form alumina (Al2O3)
  • Very high aspect ratios may be achieved
  • Pore diameter and pore packing densities are a
    function of acid strength and voltage in
    anodization step
  • Pore filling nanowire formation via various
    physical and chemical deposition methods

12
Al2O3 template preparation
  • Anodization of aluminum
  • Start with uniform layer of 1mm Al
  • Al serves as the anode, Pt may serve as the
    cathode, and 0.3M oxalic acid is the electrolytic
    solution
  • Low temperature process (2-50C)
  • 40V is applied
  • Anodization time is a function of sample size and
    distance between anode and cathode
  • Key Attributes of the process (per M. Sander)
  • Pore ordering increases with template thickness
    pores are more ordered on bottom of template
  • Process always results in nearly uniform diameter
    pore, but not always ordered pore arrangement
  • Aspect ratios are reduced when process is
    performed when in contact with substrate
    (template is 0.3-3 mm thick)

13
The alumina (Al2O3) template
(T. Sands/ HEMI group http//www.mse.berkeley.edu/
groups/Sands/HEMI/nanoTE.html)
alumina template
Si substrate
100nm
(M. Sander)
14
Electrochemical deposition
  • Works well with thermoelectric materials and
    metals
  • Process allows to remove/dissolve oxide barrier
    layer so that pores are in contact with substrate
  • Filling rates of up to 90 have been achieved

(T. Sands/ HEMI group http//www.mse.berkeley.edu/
groups/Sands/HEMI/nanoTE.html)
15
Silicon nanowire CVD growth techniques
  • With Fe/SiO2 gel template (Liu et al, 2001)
  • Mixture of 10 sccm SiH4 100 sccm helium, 5000C,
    360 Torr and deposition time of 2h
  • Straight wires w/ diameter 20nm and length
    1mm
  • With Au-Pd islands (Liu et al, 2001)
  • Mixture of 10 sccm SiH4 100 sccm helium, 8000C,
    150 Torr and deposition time of 1h
  • Amorphous Si nanowires
  • Decreasing catalyst size seems to improve
    nanowire alignment
  • Bifurcation is common
  • 30-40 nm diameter and length 2mm

16
  • Nucleation by TiSi2 islands on Si (Kamins et al,
    2000)
  • SiH4/SiH2Cl2 _at_ 6400C 6700C for 395 sec,
  • PrSiH4 .038 Torr, Ptotal 20 Torr
  • Mostly curved wires, some are branched along
    their length, some are straight 25 nm in
    diameter, 1.3 mm long
  • Vapor-Liquid-Solid (VLS) based reaction w/ Au as
    catalyst (Westwater et al, 1997)
  • Au/Si molten alloy balls nucleate and grow to a
    specific size - transition to Si nanowire growth
    occurs
  • SiH4 diluted to 10 in He flowing at 40 sccm,
    pressure range 0.110 Torr temp range of
    3207000C
  • Wire quality is best in lower pressure/higher
    temperature range, w/ wire diameter as thin as
    10nm

17
Template-assisted, Au nucleated Si nanowires
  • Gold evaporated (Au nanodots) into thin 200nm
    alumina template on silicon substrate
  • Ideally reaction with silane will yield desired
    results
  • Need to identify equipment that will support this
    process contamination, temp and press issues
  • Additional concerns include Au thickness, Au on
    alumina surface, template intact vs removed

Au dots
Au
100nm
1µm
template (top)
(M. Sander)
18
Future goals
  • The capability to fabricate nanowires of specific
    parameters (composition, contacting substrate,
    dimension and location)
  • Nano-MEMS integration
  • Devices and applications
  • Can nanowires serve as a link?
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